Communist

Intervention in Russia: 1918-1920, A Cautionary Tale, is a very well written account of a little known part of the First World War. Mr. Hudson writes in the style that I find to be the most readable and enjoyable. Perhaps it is because he is British. I have always found that British historians have a more lyrical and artistic writing style as compared to American historians. Most of my favorite historians are British, whereas Americans tend to make history books dry and boring; the British, and Australians for that matter, can make the most boring subject interesting simply by the style with which they write. The … More after the Jump…

The Stasi Museum in Leipzig, Germany. Â For those who have never heard of it, the Stasi was the East German Little brother to the Russian NKVD internal security Secret Police. Â The StasiÂ maintainedÂ a network of informers within both East and West Germany during the Cold War and also maintained dossiers onÂ almostÂ every German, even many in the West. Â In East Germany (GDR) the Stasi was the government organ responsible for internal security and ferreting out dissidents to the regime. Â They did this byÂ doing someÂ things that made the Â Nazi Gestapo look like amateurs. Below are some of the photos I took in our hasty tour of the museum before it closed.

I read The Reagan DiariesÂ when they first came out and had occasion to reread them not long ago when I had nothing better to do. Â I mainly read the book, not because I am a rabid Reagan conservative, although I have been so accused, but because Reagan was president when I was a kid in Junior and High School and he is also the first political figure who I really paid any attention to while they were in office. Â I vaguely remember Carter being president, but only because my dad got angry every time his name was mentioned. Â I learned some of my first curse words when Carter would come … More after the Jump…

I realized this morning that it has been a while since I posted a book review and I just finished re-reading this book yesterday and thought I would post a review of it.

This is a ghost-written account of Major Knappe’s time in the Wehrmacht between 1936 and his release from Russian captivity in 1949. I first read this book in the mid-90s when it was first released. At the time, I was very much into reading about World War II and thought that reading a book from the German perspective would be enlightening. I was not disappointed with this book.

This is a piece that talks about Marx, The Communist Manifesto, and how or even if,Â Marxism is still relevant in the contemporary world.

Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â The verdict of history regarding Marxism would seem to be on the side of those who claim that the Marxist program has been a colossal failure. None of the predictions made by Marx in his manifesto have come true, certainly not his central theme in which the masses reap the benefits of an equalization of status in society. It is certain that everywhere Marxism has been tried it has failed China, Russia, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Cuba among others. Marxism has failed and failed spectacularly. However, it continues to exert an attraction for those who felt that society should provide for all or that are disenchanted with the capitalist system and fell that there must be some better way of running the world.

David Horowitz made this point extremely well when he pointed out that: “since the â€˜Manifestoâ€™ was writtenâ€¦ 100 million people have been killed in its name. Between 10 and 20 times that number have been condemned to lives of unnecessary misery and human squalor, deprived of the life chances afforded the most humble citizens of the industrial democracies that Marxists set out to destroy.â€[1]Â Apparently people are not willing to give up their economic autonomy as easily as Marx thought they would be and so they must be forced into doing what Marxists perceive as being in their best interests.